Advertising Area

Advertising Area

Egypt risks unrest if poor not protected in slowdown

CAIRO: The world economic crisis could lead to a repeat of the unrest that broke out in Egypt earlier this year if the government fails to cushion millions of poor people from its impact. A new bout of discontent is unlikely to threaten the survival of the government. But it could discourage investment, which has …

The problem is that even when the economy was growing between 6 and 7 percent over the last two years, high inflation and low wages provoked violent protests and labor strikes.

In the absence of a clear social policy to protect the poor, Egypt remains threatened by more social protests, political analyst Amr El-Choubaki said.

Food, education and taxes

The unrest culminated in April when thousands of workers in the industrial town of Mahallah El-Kobra clashed with police. At least two people were killed and more than 100 wounded.

The government responded by increasing public-sector salaries by 30 percent. It later raised fuel prices and imposed taxes on firms operating in free-zone areas as part of measures to finance the wage hike, exacerbating inflation.

Everybody now knows that the tax increase for companies in free zones was a wrong decision, said Monette Doss, a senior analyst at Prime Holding, an Egyptian investment bank.

Lower global commodity prices and base effects are expected to cut inflation to an average of 9.1 percent in 2009 from 18 percent in 2008, the Economist Intelligence Unit said. With inflation receding, unemployment will be the main concern.

The government, which has not signaled an interest in reviewing tax policies, has announced an economic stimulus package worth LE 15 billion ($2.71 billion), one third of it directed at new water and sewage projects.

These are the two most important things for the people. The spending will create jobs, and the subsidies will ensure that they have access to basic needs, said Mohamed Abu Basha, an economist at investment bank EFG-Hermes.

The state is projected to spend nearly LE 80 billion this fiscal year on subsidies, more than it spends on health and education.

But the government has yet to find a better way to distribute food subsidies. Critics say the current system, which offers items such as bread and cooking oil at cheap prices, is flawed because the subsidies also go to the rich.

Nor has the government done any meaningful work to overhaul a poor education system that is ill-equipped to provide students with the necessary skills for the job market, analysts say.

Part of the problem with public education is that it remains free, which limits the state s ability to secure more funding for teachers wages. Meanwhile, Egyptian households spend billions of pounds a year on private tuition.

Fixing education should be the first move, Choubaki said.

The economy could also be harmed by the rise in piracy off the coast of east Africa. Shipping companies are choosing to avoid the Egyptian-owned Suez Canal and send cargoes of oil and other goods around southern Africa.